So far, the state Division of Consumer Affairs has filed civil actions against eight home improvement contractors, claiming they defrauded Sandy victims of more than $5 million in federal rebuilding aid.

And New Jersey has paid out about $5.4 million to homeowners in the state's biggest Sandy rebuilding programs whose grant money was taken by contractors who failed to complete home repair or elevation projects.

"Somewhere along the line, they should make the penalties really heavy," Marticek said. "If you speed in a construction zone, you get double or triple the fines. If you defraud someone in a disaster zone, you should face tougher penalties."

Marticek and others who work closely with Sandy victims say contractor fraud is one of the main reasons hundreds of storm survivors remain displaced.

For a year, Byk’s three-bedroom home on a lagoon in the township’s Mystic Island section has been perched precariously on weathered wooden cribbing.

Eight feet in the air, the house has been exposed to the elements for a year. Part of a front brick facade has cracked off; battered insulation hangs from interior walls.

Byk said he first hired contractor J&N Construction after noticing work the firm's owner, Jamie Lynn Lawson, was doing on a neighbor's Sandy-damaged home. Byk's house had been flooded with three feet of water while he and his daughter stayed dry on the second floor during the storm's surge.

He repaired the 1,800-square-foot home himself, using about $50,000 in flood insurance proceeds. But when he heard that he could get money to elevate the house through the state's largest rebuilding program for homeowners, the Reconstruction, Rehabilitation, Elevation and Mitigation program, he jumped at the chance.

"I didn't want to go through that again," Byk said of the Sandy damage, "and I wanted to get lower flood insurance rates."

After talking to Lawson, whose firm was in Brick, Byk signed a contract with him. He eventually gave Lawson $97,000 in RREM funds to lift the house, but it took more than a year for the contractor to start the actual elevation.

Lawson lifted the house on cribbing over a weekend in July. But that was the last Byk said he saw of him.

Two days after Lawson elevated the house, the township slapped a stop-work order on the property. Lawson had never applied for township permits to do the elevation, Byk said.

The Ocean County Prosecutor's Office has accused Lawson of taking $1.5 million from 34 homeowners and failing to properly complete, or even start work on their Sandy-damaged homes.

“If DCA would do a background check, this would never have happened,” Byk said, referring to the state Department of Community Affairs. In December 2016, he said he was contacted by DCA and told not to use Lawson for his job.

That was the same month that Lawson was indicted by the Ocean County Prosecutor's Office on charges of money laundering, six counts of second-degree theft by failure to make required disposition, third-degree tampering with public records — referring to omissions made in his contracting application with the state — and one count of fourth-degree unregistered home improvement contracting. Lawson has not entered a plea yet.

Lawson had moved to New Jersey shortly after Sandy and registered his business in November 2012. At the time the state was awash with contractors who had come to New Jersey to help with the rebuilding effort.

The Division of Consumer Affairs, the agency that licenses numerous types of contractors, authorized Lawson's application to become a home improvement contractor, reportedly unaware he had criminal convictions in other states, according to the prosecutor's office.

Authorities said Lawson moved to various states following natural disasters. Records show Lawson lived in North Carolina, Texas and Oklahoma, among other places, and then moved to New Jersey shortly after Sandy decimated much of the shore.

The prosecutor's office said Lawson, 42, used the money homeowners gave him for his personal expenses and to buy cars.BThe Lawson case is one of more than 25 Sandy fraud cases currently being investigated by the Ocean County Prosecutor's Office, according to Sgt. Mark Malinowski, who heads the economic crimes unit.

"They range from one victim to 34, 35 victims," Malinowski said of the cases, adding the fraud cost runs into the millions of dollars. "A lot of these guys bounce from town to town, and we were able, through our networks and our police departments, to find where they had been operating."

Malinowski noted that his office only looks into fraud cases of more than $75,000, or are multi-jurisdictional, so there are many more contractor investigations being handled by local police departments.

Malinowski estimated that Sandy fraud cases still represent about a third of his unit's caseload.

In 2014, two years after the superstorm struck, and the same year that Edwin Byk decided to raise his house, the state fundamentally changed how contractors were hired in the RREM program.

Department of Community Affairs spokeswoman Lisa Ryan has said homeowners were urged to call Consumer Affairs before hiring a contractor to learn if there were any complaints against the company.

DCA revised the RREM program after homeowners overwhelmingly told department officials that they wanted to be able to pick their own contractors, Ryan has said.

But most homeowners had never had to oversee such a large rebuilding project, or ever had as much cash to manage. RREM awarded a maximum of $150,000 for rebuilding and elevation projects. Overwhelmed, most just wanted to get back into their houses quickly.

Byk admits he shouldn't have given Lawson so much money up front.

"I didn't want to do it myself," Byk said of selecting a contractor. "I've never done anything like this before. I think the state should have kept doing it."

Ryan has said that RREM has worked well for the majority of homeowners who participated in the program, allowing thousands to replace, repair and elevate their homes.

Of the approximately 7,600 homeowners in RREM, 5,333 have completed construction, while about 700 more have returned home while they finish building, she said.

New Jersey has created a process by which homeowners who were defrauded can receive an additional RREM award, up to as much as their original grant, if a government agency files a criminal or civil action against their contractor.

The award is meant to pay for the work that still must be done to complete the initial project, Ryan said.

But Byk has not yet been able to apply for a revised grant award. He is still awaiting notice from the prosecutor's office that indicates Lawson has been charged in his case. It's needed for him to seek funds from DCA to complete his project.

Even after he receives the document, it may take awhile for him to get more money.

"The length of time it takes for us to disburse RREM funds to a defrauded homeowner varies, as each project is unique and depends on the complexity of the case," DCA's Ryan said.

In the meantime, Byk has paid $7,000 for new architectural and engineering plans and to get all permits needed to complete the home elevation "and make it safe," he said.

Byk is renting a room in his next-door neighbor's house and is receiving rental assistance from the state.

"That's the only way I've been able to afford to stay here," said Byk, who works part-time for the Tall Timbers Homeowners Association in Little Egg Harbor.

State Sen. Jennifer Beck said she believes the state should do more for homeowners in the RREM and Low and Moderate Income Homeowners Rebuilding program who are victims of fraud.

It also would allow the state Attorney General to sue on behalf of homeowners for contractor negligence. The law limits the attorney general's office to sue in criminal cases only.

"It is the State of New Jersey's responsibility to defend our homeowners," Beck said. "It's our responsibility to take this to the mat for them."

Beck's bill is awaiting action in the Senate Budget and Appropriations Committee but has not come up for a vote there.

"The travesty is, there were project managers assigned (by the state)," in RREM, Beck said. "Most homeowners assumed they were going to manage the project. But they didn't. The project managers were just there to make sure the money was spent according to HUD guidelines."

Byk, who once planned to spend his retirement years in Mystic Island, is so frustrated with his experiences that he's now thinking of moving away after he finally completes his elevation project.

"For a year the house has been up," Byk said. "I never should have raised it. I should have left it like it was."​